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Gold rose to its highest in a week today after euro
zone policymakers sealed an agreement for a second debt deal with Greece.
Gold remained flat at $1,736/oz in Asian trading after
the deal was reached but then saw some buying which saw gold quickly rise to
$1,740/oz and then creep up to over $1,743/oz.

Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)

U.S. gold rose 1% from Friday's close to $1,743.5
following the Greek bailout, catching up with gains in cash prices after the
U.S. market was shut on Monday for a public holiday yesterday. Gold
subsequently fell back to $1,737/oz in mid morning European trade.

Asian stocks were mixed and European indices are lower.
This is either a case of ‘buy the rumour,
sell the news’ or maybe market participants are beginning to get
nervous regarding successive efforts at kicking the much abused can down the
road and are nervous about other highly indebted industrial nations.

Gold has consolidated between $1,700 and $1,750 in the
past two weeks as Greece has struggled to avoid default which could lead to
contagion in the euro zone.

The decision may help Athens resolve its immediate
payment needs, but Greece still faces a very bleak financial and economic
outlook in the coming years.

With elections tentatively scheduled in April, Greek
politicians may become increasingly wary of standing behind the measures over
popular outcry.

Those who have been correct about the crisis in recent
years question whether a new Greek government will stick to the deeply
unpopular program after elections due in April and believe Athens could again
fall behind in implementation, prompting lenders to pull the plug once the eurozone has stronger financial firewalls in place.

The much used phrase "kicking the can down the
road" underestimates the risks being created by European and
international policy makers. Some have rightly warned that we will likely
soon run out of road.

Rather than "kicking the can down the road"
what politicians in Europe, in the U.S. and internationally are actually
doing is "kicking a giant beer keg down the road".

The giant beer keg is the continual resort to cheap
money in the form of ultra loose monetary policies,
QE1, QE2, QE3 etc, money printing and electronic
money creation on a scale never seen before in history.

The road is our modern international financial and
monetary system.

The risk is that attempting to kick the giant beer keg
down the road will lead to many broken feet and a destroyed road.

A European, US, Japanese and increasingly global debt
crisis will not be solved by creating more debt and making taxpayers pay
odious debts incurred through massively irresponsible lending practices of
international banks.

The likelihood of continuing massive liquidity
injections by the ECB next week and in the coming weeks will help keep the
opportunity cost of holding bullion the lowest it has ever been and likely
contribute to higher bullion prices especially in euro terms in the coming
months.

XAU-EUR Exchange Rate 2 Days – (Bloomberg)

While the euro strengthened against the dollar, gold
priced in euros fell initially but has edged marginally higher and gold is
trading at €1,313/oz.

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OTHER NEWS(Bloomberg) -- Gold Trading Rose 1% in January as Silver Declined,
LBMA Says
Gold trading increased 1 percent to an average of 22.2 million ounces a day
in January compared with a month earlier, the London Bullion Market
Association said today in an e-mailed report.

Silver trading fell 24 percent to a daily average of
149.2 million ounces, the lowest level since March, the LBMA said.

(Bloomberg) -- The J.P. Morgan View: The return of Asset
Reflation
• Asset Allocation –– All assets are beating cash YTD,
showing the power of asset reflation, which is being reinvigorated by massive
liquidity injections from central banks across the world. We stay long the
higher risk-beta asset classes, equities, gold and credit. • Economics
–– World growth forecasts remain unchanged, but higher oil prices
temper the upside risk bias from recent PMIs. • Fixed Income
–– Government yields still out of kilter with improving activity
data and the equity rally. • Equities –– Staying long and
OW DAX and EM. • Credit –– We stay with overweights
in EM $ sovereigns, US HG and US HY. • Foreign exchange ––
Our main non-consensus calls for Q2 are a stronger euro and yen, at $1.34,
and ¥73, versus the USD. • Commodities –– OPEC should
be able to offset any lost Iranian exports but uncertainty around this is
pushing oil prices higher. The rally in riskier assets reached a pause mode
over the past week on higher oil prices.

(Bloomberg) -- Hedge Funds Boost Bullish Wagers to
Five-Month High: Commodities
Hedge funds increased commodity bets to the highest in almost five months on
signs that a rescue plan for Greece and faster U.S. growth will buoy demand
as supplies shrink for everything from soybeans to copper.

Money managers boosted net-long position across 18 U.S.
futures and options by 2.9 percent to 956,313 contracts in the week ended
Feb. 14, the most since Sept. 20, government data show. Soybean wagers jumped
29 percent to a five-month high. Silver holdings rose for a seventh straight
week, the longest advance in almost three years.

The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index of 24
commodities reached a six-month high on Feb. 17 as euro-area leaders
expressed confidence that an agreement on a Greek bailout can be reached.
Reports last week on U.S. housing and manufacturing beat analysts’
forecasts, and claims for jobless benefits dropped to a four-year low.
Investments in raw-material futures have jumped 13 percent this year,
exchange data show.

SILVER Silver is trading at $33.71/oz,
€25.47/oz and £21.33/oz.

PLATINUM GROUP METALS
Platinum is trading at $1,657.97/oz, palladium at
$693.04/oz and rhodium at $1,500/

Mark O'Byrne is executive and research director of www.GoldCore.com which he founded in 2003.
GoldCore have become one of the leading gold brokers in the world and have over 4,000 clients in over 40 countries and with over $200 million in assets under management and storage.We offer mass affluent, HNW, UHNW and institutional investors including family offices, gold, silver, platinum and palladium bullion in London, Zurich, Singapore, Hong Kong, Dubai and Perth.